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Dai
Dai
05:12
Does anyone know if Mads Torgersen's "extension everything" is still a thing? I haven't seen any announcements since 2021 - I know there was hope for it making C# 10.0, but that came-and-went without what we were hoping for...
 
2 hours later…
07:14
[Squirrel in Training] GoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOd Mornin' neglecterinos!
[Squirrel in Training] No idea dai sorry
[Squirrel in Training] Dont ven nknow what thats siupposed to be tbh
Dai
Dai
@Squirrelintraining he brings it up a lot when he's delivering talks about the future of C#, for example, here's a random one from last year: nodogmapodcast.bryanhogan.net/…
"roles and shapes" - or: "rather than fixing interface types we'll just add a whole new kind of type, lol"
mr5
mr5
We've got an interesting problem
Dai
Dai
elucidate
mr5
mr5
About build version (the 1.0.0 (number_here))
Dai
Dai
you need to stop using [assemly: Version("1.0.*")]
mr5
mr5
07:21
Eh
This is platform agnostic
Dai
Dai
it's incompatible with deterministic builds
sorry, yes - I should have let you finished explaining, sorry
mr5
mr5
The build version should have the following property: 1) unique across branches, 2) must always be greater than 1 with each build, and 3) smol
First thought is: use the YYYYMMDD + (seconds of day) which resolves to this example: 20220303186400
But izz super big
So I thought of truncating the year to 22 only
But it is still big
So why seconds elapsed since 1970 (unix timestamp)
But it's a bit human unfriendly
Izz still big though
Another is communicating the latest build version every build (too much work). This way, we can start build version to 1
Any thoughts @Dai
Dai
Dai
why do you have these restrictions in the first place?
and why aren't you using deterministic builds with a version-numbering scheme like semver?
mr5
mr5
What is that?
Dai
Dai
sensible: semver.org
it's how NuGet packages are versioned
mr5
mr5
07:32
Other things that have mentioned there will not work for us unfortunately
Wait. I'm still eating. Will explain after
Dai
Dai
right, it sounds like you have business-constraints that get in-the-way of a good technical solution (a common problem...)
For example, if I were to violently murder all of my unsophisticated end-users then that would solve our tech-support backlog problem - however apparently "having revenue" is a business-constraint that's kinda important, damnit
[Captain Obvious] Just kill the ones that cause problems, keeps the ones that don't
Dai
Dai
07:50
but if we got rid of all of them I would just be so happy
[Captain Obvious] But then you'd have no job
[Captain Obvious] Customers = revenuw which is usually* required for jobs to remain
Dai
Dai
yes, that's the joke
[Captain Obvious] * Unless you're a startup, burning through investor money until you inevitably go bust without releasing a product
mr5
mr5
08:07
oi
I'm back
reading that semver again
Dai
Dai
I'm reading through a horrible error list
4990 warnings to go...
mr5
mr5
noice
looks like you're working on a legacy app
or lib
Dai
Dai
yes
mr5
mr5
by legacy, does that automatically mean italian codes?
Dai
Dai
it's my company's bread-and-butter product, started off as a WebForms 2.0 project and it's being dragged kicking and screaming through WebForms 4.0, then my own FP-style web framework, then Fx MVC, then ASP.NET Core 2.1, and now ASP.NET Core 3.1
italian?
mr5
mr5
08:11
on that semantic versioning, the part where it will not work for us is appending major.minor.revision/patch with a hyphen part. e.g., 1.0.0-alpha will not work cuz AppStore & TestFlight does not allow it.
so x.y.z will only apply
Dai
Dai
I almost got .aspx files working as views in ASP.NET Core - that was a fun project, but it wasn't good enough to actually put in production, so I had to manually convert it all to cshtml
mr5
mr5
@Dai spaghetti!
yikes
isn't webforms a thing of past already?
Dai
Dai
no, this project is nicely architectured - no spaghetti here
mr5
mr5
why is there a lot of warnings though
deprecated API/SDKs?
Dai
Dai
@mr5 yes, but I was thinking that I could probably get-away with selling a WebForms migration toolkit with .aspx support in ASP.NET Core to large enterprises...
then I realized I really don't want to have to actually support those kinds of users
most of those 5000 warnings are from nullable-reference-types
oh, and from Entity Framework too
mr5
mr5
08:14
oh
so you are just enforcing nullable
is that already set by default in VS?
last time I checked, you need to manually do it
EF is not Core?
Dai
Dai
EF6, not EF Core, correct
right, these are all opt-in warnings because I'm a masochist
mr5
mr5
that's a lot of work
I would say, someone should build a tool to automate that
oh
a lot of refactor too
esp. for model/dto types
Dai
Dai
I have my own opinions about that...
mr5
mr5
class Dto { public string A { get; set; } }
Dai
Dai
C# really needs Code Contracts back, with reified preconditions and postconditions - it'll singlehandedly eliminate entire classes of software defects
@mr5 how much do you want to raise my blood-pressure?
mr5
mr5
08:19
example. should be marked as init instead of set
Dai
Dai
ARGH
NOOOO
USE CONSTRUCTORS DAMNIT
init properties should never have been added to the language
mr5
mr5
err, for fields. but for properties, it should be init or just convert that to records
Dai
Dai
...no
you're forgetting the entire point of constructors: to establish instance invariants and to make hard guarantees about object state
init properties make a mockery of the entire art of class design
mr5
mr5
@Dai about this high 1/0
yeah, but I think it should be a field instead of a property
I just recently learned about TypeScript
Dai
Dai
I'm just going to refrain from commenting at this point, I can't tell if you're trolling me
mr5
mr5
08:23
and I'm amazed about the interface and its optional types
:D
> The init accessor makes immutable objects more flexible by allowing the caller to mutate the members during the act of construction. That means the object's immutable properties can participate in object initializers and thus removes the need for all constructor boilerplate in the type
@Dai TIL and it sounds awful.
mr5
mr5
hey, property initializer is much beautiful as compared to initializing it in ctor
in TS, it can be enforced like this:
interface Something {
  a: number;
  b: string;
  c: bool;
  d?: ThatThing;
}

{
  a: 1,
  b: 'm',
  c: true
} as Something;
I think that's why init has been introduced -- to copy TS
if this is written in ctor to make hard guarantees about object state, it would look awful and requires some IDE help to know which fields/prop has been set.
The problem is that it doesn't scale. Interfaces in TS are OK but if you have more than 4-ish properties, it quickly becomes very combersome to initialise them by hand. Especially if you have optional properties.
interface Foo {
    a: string
    b?: string
    c: number
    d?: number
    e: boolean
    f?: boolean
    g: string | null
    h: string | number
}
Dai
Dai
@VLAZ init-only properties only make sense for optional state without any dependencies on the state of the rest of the object. But I rarely come across a need for that - and I'm more concerned about people who still don't grok constructors and assume C# object-initializers are somehow always the best way to create and populate objects
This isn't even too much of a ridiculous example. And making one of these as an object literal all the time becomes very annoying. And then if the interface is changed then all the creation points might be wrong.
Dai
Dai
08:32
@VLAZ Partial<T> in TS tho
@Dai I'm on it :D
Give me a moment. I should have prepared the example before I posted.
yeah interface cant have optional values, it bite me also
Dai
Dai
@nyconing yes they can
I 'fix' it using [] or nullable
@Dai how? example?
Dai
Dai
08:34
plzdont
@nyconing using the ? modifier on property-names to make them | undefined i.e. optional, as well as utility-types like Partial<T> and the rest.
compiler give me error if I dont complete the field in interface
Dai
Dai
what version of tsc are you using? sounds like you're still on 2.x
mr5
mr5
@VLAZ I mean, I would still prefer that over initializing it in ctor
idk, maybe 13
Dai
Dai
there is no TypeScript v13
08:36
oh sry lol
angular 13
idk which ts version they use
[Captain Obvious] @Dai why not just disable warnings
Typescript Playground - initialising an interface easier.
It can also be a factory (doesn't really matter) but point is - that's easier to do than having a big unwieldy interface.
Dai
Dai
```
(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
```
08:38
It's also a lot of boilerplate but you can generalise over it.
Dai
Dai
@VLAZ this can be simplified if you use a primary-ctor (that's when field-style properties are declared inline the ctor parameter list)
I wanted to write the long-hand to show off what it does. But it's not too hard to shorten it. It can also be tackled in few different ways.
Dai
Dai
brb getting alcohol
it's 01:42 and I survived another day
mr5
mr5
hey
The pattern is simple enough: accept a Partial<MyType> and thus you can specify less properties. Then default the ones that need to exist.
mr5
mr5
08:43
SO profile has been updated
@mr5 Uh, should I dare look at it?
Dai
Dai
my profile looks the same, *shrugs*
mr5
mr5
ehh I'm not sure. It looks new to me =P
It does not look worse than before.
Mostly because I don't see any differences.
So, it looks exactly as bad as before.
mr5
mr5
kek
Dai
Dai
08:46
SO did update the notification icons in the top bar for some reason this week
[Captain Obvious] They removed developer story and jobs
@Dai They did it yesterday.
[Captain Obvious] Actually not sure jobs is gone yet but DS is
@Botler Today is the last day for both. At least according to the announcement.
Dai
Dai
Developer Story never made any sense to me
"yet another resume-hosting site"
08:47
[Captain Obvious] Yeah pretty mucj
Meh, it was tied to Jobs
[Captain Obvious] Jobs was pretty cool though
mr5
mr5
does anyone know a way to generate a number i.e., universally unique, precision at seconds is enough, and incremental (I mean, after generating one, the next should be greater than before), and small (because it will be displayed for teams).
Candidates:
- unix timestamp (maybe changing the epoch to year 2020 would make it smaller?)
- YYMMDD + (seconds of day)
- ??
[Captain Obvious] unix timestamp is your friend
mr5
mr5
@Dai it looks gamified
08:51
[Captain Obvious] I mean if it's going in a database, just bang an AI id column, sorted
mr5
mr5
yeah, that's kind of the best option I have right now
but there maybe other way
wherein we could start at number 1 perhaps?
Dai
Dai
( DateTime.UtcNow - new DateTime( 2022, 01, 01 ) ).TotalSeconds / 10
[Captain Obvious] AI IDs start at 1...
[Captain Obvious] It's literally exactly what youre looking for and what AI int columns are designed for
mr5
mr5
precision is not in seconds though
[Captain Obvious] Precision is as fas t as your can add columns
mr5
mr5
08:54
@CaptainObvious but the problem is we need to implement it either in local dev machine, or in gitlab pipeline
@mr5 YYMMDDHHSS seems sensible. Or you want it smaller than this?
[Captain Obvious] Oh you meant that one
[Captain Obvious] Gitlab pipeline? Is this for identifying builds?
[Captain Obvious] Because if so, there's already such a thing $CI_PIPELINE_IID
mr5
mr5
@VLAZ it doesn't look precise to me. It seems it allows generating same version in every minute?
@mr5 Oops, I meant YYMMDDHHmmss so, year, month, day, hour, minute, second
mr5
mr5
but izz big now
08:56
Two different seconds give you two different numbers.
Does this need to be decentralised?
mr5
mr5
yeah
Dai
Dai
using yyyyMMdd lowers the information-density of the string
mr5
mr5
decentralize across git branches
Well, you have very few options, then.
[Captain Obvious] Gotta be unix tiemstamp
08:57
Basing on date will ensure you don't get duplicates and you get them incremental
[Captain Obvious] Maybe hide (don't remove, just hide) the first like 6 digits
Just do an Unix epoch thing but starting at a different date This will give you the same thing but smaller
Dai
Dai
```
Convert.ToBase64String( BitConverter.GetBytes( ( (Int64)( DateTime.UtcNow - new DateTime( 2022, 01, 01 ) ).TotalSeconds ) ) ).TrimEnd( 'A', '=' )
```
^ that
||> Date.now() - new Date("2022-01-01")
@VLAZ 7722062672 Logged: [ ] Took: 0ms
09:01
Just to show what the number looks like
Dai
Dai
gives me nice 4-5 char strings
That's in milliseconds (JS) so you'd have three less digits in seconds.
[Captain Obvious] not for long though
mr5
mr5
@Dai can this be converted to integer?
[Captain Obvious] Just don't convert it to B64
Dai
Dai
09:10
yes
mr5
mr5
@VLAZ yeah, this is the first option I have in mind.
Ehh
So everyone is pointing at timestamp where epoch is set to current year
Well, I think that's the best I guess?
@mr5 You get a smaller number that way
Dai
Dai
oooh, do it in reverse: count-down to some date in the future
You can still just use a normal Unix timestamp.
mr5
mr5
@CaptainObvious would that $CI_PIPELINE_IID work across different git branches?
09:21
@mr5 If you use one place that manages the builds - yes.
[Captain Obvious] It's per repo I believe
[Captain Obvious] or project
 
2 hours later…
11:03
[Hector] sup
[Hector] what a bunch of weeks
[Hector] This has been hectic AF
11:24
[Captain Obvious] But you are at new job?
 
2 hours later…
mr5
mr5
13:19
on a typical git-flow strategy, how would you enable a branch to merge a "code refactoring feature" without issuing merge conflicts?
this code refactoring would happen will be in the feature branch itself.
example scenario:
feature-1 made a code refactoring.
feature-2 wants the code refactoring to be merge but not the actual feature itself.
a cleaner solution for this is to do the code refactoring on a dedicated branch where feature-1 and feature-2 can branch off but that is impractical.
@mr5 It's one of the things that you cannot really do cleanly. You need to coordinate with the team.
Ideally you want refactoring to go into develop first, then people can proceed with new feature branches.
Which means that for a while nobody should be working on the features that will be affected by the refactor
mr5
mr5
yeah but that is hard to justify to POs
If you have to work on both at once, it's going to be messy. But you can do one branch for refactor and branch off that one for features. It's not perfect at all but it's better than branching all of them off develop
mr5
mr5
and you will be breaking the git-flow if you directly made change to the develop branch
Yes, I meant that you always make a feature off develop
mr5
mr5
13:33
hmm
let's say you are the only maintainer, how would you do it?
13:49
I guess I'd create another branch from the refactoring commit, then rebase feature-2 onto that, and try to merge the refactoring branch into develop first.
Unless I'm the only person working on these two features and I'm definitely not gonna change anything about the refactoring commit, then I might even cherry-pick it into feature-2
mr5
mr5
but in order to cherry pick it, you will think ahead everytime you would want to make a code refactor and commit just that changes
while implementing the feature, there might be another code refactor you would do but the changes may create a lot of merge conflicts
if the code refactor is highly integrated with the feature, how would you cherry pick just the code refactor section?
I think one should practice a strict discipline if they think they would create a code refactor on a feature branch or not.
50
A: Where does refactoring belong in GitFlow branch naming model?

EwanRefactoring work should go in a feature branch. The prefix "feature" is just a word to describe a discrete programming task, you could choose any word you like, any branch from development is either a "feature" branch or a "release" branch Adding a new prefix such as "refactoring" is problemati...

14:06
@mr5 1. Make sure I don't have feature branches in flight. At least not ones I'd be refactoring. Finish all of them. 2. Make a new branch for refactoring. 3. Don't work on anything else unless absolutely necessary and unless it's quite small. 4. Finish the refactoring and merge to develop. 5. Start working on new branches.
Although if I'm the only maintainer and I'm working on one thing at a time, lots of these are not issues.
I might even just fold refactoring into the current feature I'm working on. Like, finish the feature and then do refactor on the same branch. Or refactor first, then feature.
mr5
mr5
the problem with this answer is that a feature branch may get on hold indefinitely where you may or may not get that code refactor in the succeeding branches.
@VLAZ but if you are practicing scrum where you do bi-weekly releases and where tickets may get hold indefinitely, it's going to be a problem.
I mean, it shouldn't be a problem. If scrum doesn't allow for refactoring that is the issue. It's not a problem with gitflow.
Scrum should incorporate sustain cycles. Maybe every other sprint or something but you cannot only add features. You accrue tech debt. If you never burn through it, then new features become more complex.
@mr5 I would have done the refactoring first, committed that, then do the feature in its own commit. That way not only can you potentially cherry-pick it, but more importantly you can view the changes separately. You can view the 20 lines of the feature, and separately view the 200 lines of the refactoring. Makes code reviews a lot easier, and also coming back after some time if you're trying to understand what your stupid ass did a month ago.
mr5
mr5
@VLAZ what if a the thought to refactor just pops in the middle of feature dev? it may not even be a technical debt ...let's say paradigm change or something?
@mr5 Refactoring is primarily part of every ticket, just like unit tests.
mr5
mr5
14:16
@Squirrelkiller well that is the best case but I do think it is not always guaranteed.
the thought of code refactor may pop everytime you implement a new feature
git commit -m "wip"
<refactor>
git commit -m "refactor"
git rebase -i HEAD~3
<move refactor commit before wip feature>
Then continue feature
Basically, just pretend you thought of the nice refactoring from the beginning
mr5
mr5
oh
does that mean a commit can be re ordered?
@mr5 Than it's just normal part of development. I do that often - I'd pick up a feature and notice some small things where I'm working on and fix them. It might be that some namings are wrong (since we've introduced a style guide) or similar. Might just be that I want to reorder the imports. I make that into a separate commit and title it it "cleanup"
@mr5 Yes, check the interactive rebase. If you use non-command line git, you might even be able to drag and drop.
Using git rebase -i HEAD~3 will open the text editor configured in your git config and display the last 3 commits, each in one line. You can reorder those as you please. Then save and close the file, and git will reset to before those three commits and replay them in the order you told it to.
mr5
mr5
let's say we agree on this:
- make the refactor as part of the feature branch
how can this solve this problem:
18 mins ago, by mr5
the problem with this answer is that a feature branch may get on hold indefinitely where you may or may not get that code refactor in the succeeding branches.
14:25
This can of course trigger merge conflicts if you swap commits where the currently newer one relies on the currently older one.
@mr5 Then you have multiple options:
1) Fix your process. A feature branch should not be on hold indefinitely.
2) cherry-pick the refactor commit into another branch
3) new branch from the refactor commit and rebase your current feature on that, or use that as new feature branch and rebase onto develop
I mean, if you have a feature branch on hold, it's going to be an issue regardless of whether you do any refactor or not.
mr5
mr5
@Squirrelkiller okay, the 3 would be something I could do but I'm not sure how to communicate this in high level to PO.
if in case it breaks something
This is not the kind of thing I communicate to the PO, this is just refactoring on the go
mr5
mr5
another problem:
- what if you want the code refactor from the feature branch to immediately inherit to the next branch but still under QA?
Just as I don't go "Btw I fixed the naming of the variables in class XY" in the daily, because nobody cares
@mr5 Then the refactor will go through QA twice: once for the first feature, and again for the second feature
mr5
mr5
14:34
I mean, just in case it breaks something, and the PO made the decision to revert it cuz it's causing too much trouble (hypothetical)
@Squirrelkiller how will you do this in git wherein feature1 should not be applied to feature2 (current)?
By having the refactor in a separate commit
Either cherry-pick the commits or have a common branch for both.
There is no ultimate solution here. What you're describing is not really a git problem. It's a process problem.
Also a refactor should never be able to actually break the thing, as it is defined as not changing the logic.
@VLAZ this
mr5
mr5
yeah agree
git lets you change history any time you want, you just need to get your own process straight
mr5
mr5
14:39
I still can't wrap my head around that re ordering of commits. I'll get back to you if I ever try it some time
Also, I honestly get it. I've had managers who don't really see value in refactoring. What you can do is be "sneaky" about it and incorporate it into your other work. Which, let's be honest, it isn't that far off what you have to do anyway.
mr5
mr5
I usually cannot comprehend things until I'm actually doing it
It's not that someone is holding me to do it though. I'm trying to strictly follow the process.
At my current place management finally got around to understanding this as a problem. I've raised the topic many times on retrospectives but was ignored. Until recently when they started asking "But why is the code base in this condition" and I had to remind them about the refactoring thing I mentioned many times.
mr5
mr5
but yeah, I can make sneaky move so that those code refactors will be applied to the upcoming branches
Like, it's not terrible but there have been issues baked in since two years.
And the project started two year ago...
I must say that it feels very satisfying to be able to say "Yes, the problem is what I've been telling you about several times".
mr5
mr5
14:43
nice. that's relieving.
I think I'm lucky in a way with my current manager
he agrees that I do refactor on every feature I made on day 1
At the end of the day, the issue is that refactor is something that has to happen. Maybe not immediately but over time you do need to revisit older code.
If you never do it, then tasks start taking more and more time due to code rot.
mr5
mr5
there is this ridiculous code about push notification for mobile that I refactored.
the previous state was, they include the "server key" where it should only reside on the server -- it's listening to a push notif while at the same time, it's sending itself...
PO isn't really interested in that, though. A PO is interested in features. However, the technical implementation of that is up to the developers. And if a developer said "We need A and B in order to do this feature" then there isn't much what the PO can do. They can change the scope of the feature or delay it for later. Or just go with "do it".
The last option is the most common one if you can sell it to them. And for refactor - you don't even need to do much. It's a technical task, you don't have to explain yourself "I need to change this to be a factory". The same way you won't explain to the PO in detail how you'd implement the feature each step of the way.
A refactor is part of it. Maybe it adds an hour or three to a feature but if it would already take 10+ hours anyway, it's a drop in the bucket.
And you can very easily defend your position that you need this work in order to continue. You probably won't even need to lie about it.
mr5
mr5
@VLAZ yeah, the problem with me is I always forgot that I have that authority or... that I can't communicate it properly
Then you don't. Typically, you should get a feature, give your estimate in how much it would take (whether in hours, days, story points, or whatever) and then you'd get the go ahead. A proper estimate should include some leeway. It's not just to do the bare minimum the get the feature done. That's...not sustainable.
In some cases you might need to do the bare minimum, sure. For example, a critical issue needs to be fixed ASAP.
But usually that's accompanied with another "make a proper fix" task for later.
mr5
mr5
14:54
We have this two senior that is leading the whole team.
They create a very good documents where it contains why a technical refactor should be done and relate it to a bigger picture.
I am not sure how can I do it. Maybe it's due to I am still new to the team? Or I haven't been on a team before where a proper scrum is done.
Typically, their tickets description always contains a lot of backing documents, where mine only contains just a few words.
their ticket:
let's do this <technical jargon> because
- documen1 says document 2
- document3 for the bla bla
- and for upcoming document4
my ticket:
I found the need to do this because it's not right.
The trick when writing descriptions is to make it as clear as possible, so anybody who picks up the task later can start work immediately and not need any more clarification. If you create a ticket where you already know most of the things...well, whoever reads it later might not. And it might be you reading the ticket six months from now with no recollection why it was made.
Why is it not right?
Continue asking "why" as long as needed
mr5
mr5
I actually say it, I just exaggerate it in this example.
it's just that their tickets always contains a backing documents.
I've done the last thing in the past. I'd make a ticket thinking "I know what this is about" but for one reason or another, never get around to it. Then months later I look at it and have no idea what I wanted to do.
So, now I just provide as much information as possible. In some cases including file names where changes need to be made. Although that's not very often needed. I'd still outline what exactly needs to be done and what should not be done. This is important otherwise, it's hard to remember in the future how to handle those cases.
mr5
mr5
do you also practice a tech design?
is the "spike" jargon part of the scrum?
15:04
Most definitely not enough.
It's another thing I've been complaining about.
But finally getting more buy-in from others to start doing it properly.
mr5
mr5
this is actually the first time I heard of its existence
and my current company is always doing it where it's necessary
At my old place, we used Kanban, which has a different flow. You focus on delivering a feature. And those can take different times. Might be that it takes a week, might be that it takes a month, depending on how big it is. You don't have the rhythm of scrum. And as a result there is less pressure on features.
It's not really just the methodology, though, but it is definitely a bit different.
With scrum you try to provide new features every sprint but that's not really possible every time.
mr5
mr5
yeah, I think we done Kanban before in my previous company too
I actually have no idea what that is but it's very relax
With kanban you are encouraged to be more thorough and not just do a feature for feature's sake.
mr5
mr5
but I think it's problematic
there is no pressure. as a result, I don't finish my task quickly
15:09
I mean, depends on how it's managed. You shouldn't really be given infinite time for a feature.
If you commit for, say, a week then maybe running a bit over might be tolerated. If it's in QA and some issues are found, for example - sure.
But if after 10 days the feature isn't anywhere near completion, then something should be done. Might be cancelled, might be more people are added. But it's definitely going to be brought up and discussed how to be handled better in the future.
Design is big part of this. We designed features way better with Kanban. Because we'd get them maybe months before we start them. We'd have a lot of time to discuss and understand them, then break them down into what technical tasks need to be done, then maybe even take a peek at the code to see if the infrastructure is there for what we want to do.
And that doesn't really take that much in general. Maybe 1-3 meetings 30-60 minutes each. So, at worst it's 3 hours * X people in the meetings. But you can spread them out one every week or two.
With scrum, the pressure is to do all the planning for the next spring at once and that doesn't really work well. There are usually many things to plan and not enough time to get into the details of tasks.
Hence why more preliminary design needs to be done IMO. But for this you also need the features prepared more than a sprint in advance and...in my current place we don't have that very often. Usually the requirements for next sprint aren't really known before the end of the current spring. Some times even the PO doesn't quite know them in advance as he's in discussions for what the users actually want. Some times there is some ideas but they need to be synthesised into requirements.
If we had a backlog going a sprint or two in advance, then it'd be much easier. We could do some design work upfront. At least outline what is needed or not needed.
 
5 hours later…
20:28
[Captain Obvious] I think I'm turning into wiet
[Captain Obvious] I want to draw a graph with some data, but I can't be bothered learning how to use a normal graph library, either client or server side
[Captain Obvious] So I'm just drawing my own grpah using GDI
20:46
that is not how it works
authentication, encryption, ides and graphs/charts are things you do not want to write yourself
on the other hand, I have not been impressed by the existing graph libraries lately
20:59
[Captain Obvious] Looks like it works to me

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